PARENT TO PARENT: Hipseat from Hippychick Review

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The problem: The school run. Sound familiar?

We’ve all been there. Watched our children finally gain the confidence to take those first steps, beg to walk to the local shop with you, then get bored and insist you carry them home.

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Image Source: Davee Blu Photography

I walk Dexter to nursery everyday (I can’t complain as the school run is literally under five minutes). Dex is super capable and responsible on the roads and will often take his balance bike or scooter, yet Heidi (at 2 years old) is an absolute nightmare. The walk there tends to go to plan (unless she sees a cat and decides to chase it), but the walk home takes anywhere from 15-30 minutes where she’s in a strop that her brother has left her to go and play with his friends.

90% of the time I’ll find myself having to drag / carry / bundle her home any which way I can. There are screams, sit-on-the-pavement protests and tantrums. Oh so many tantrums.

The thing is Heidi loves to be carried, but she’s so heavy I can’t manage it the entire way home. Not only is it uncomfortable for her, and she’ll arch her back and make like I’ve kidnapped her, my back simply can’t take the strain.

The solution: The Hipseat from Hippychick

I’ve tried slings and child carriers plenty of times with Heidi, but am yet to find one to really suit me. I hate being swathed in fabric on a sweaty day, and big bulky backpack-style carriers aren’t exactly convenient for a quick school run.

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Thankfully, once again, the guys at Hippychick have smashed it and brought about a solution to this age-old problem. Their Hipseat is a lightweight and portable solution for carrying children aged 6 months-3 years.

What is it?

Put simply, it’s a fully adjustable band (42 inches maximum, extensions available for sizes 20+) that sits atop your hips. On one side there’s a padded seat with a non-slip pad for your child to perch on. It can take the weight of heavy 3-year-olds, and is designed specifically to load-bear so your child’s weight is distributed more evenly. If there’s any doubt, the Hipseat is endorsed and recommended by osteopaths, chiropractors, physiotherapists and health centres, and has won tons of awards to boot.

Specifically designed to address one of the root causes of adult back pain, the hipseat supports {a child’s] increasingly heavy weight from underneath. Instead of twisting the spine, the parent’s back stays straight and the child is tucked into the chest, providing comfort and security for both adult and child.

How did we get on?

I LOVE it! I had worried it would be bulky to haul around, but it comes in a cute little drawstring dust bag and the lightweight seat is actually removable too. This means you can simply detach the seat and pop it under your pushchair when your tot decides to go for a stroll.

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Not only this, but it’s sooo easy to use - unlike slings, you won’t need to watch dozens of YouTube videos to get it right. You just secure it around your waist, swivel the seat into position, place your child on the seat with their legs astride if facing in, or bottom firmly on seat if facing out. The flexibility to allow your child to sit however they are most comfortable is really handy. Obviously you’ll have one arm around your child at all times, but the other is completely free to hold another child’s hand, or your handbag.

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My back problems are notably improved. I’ve managed a yoga DVD every night with none of the pain or stiffness I usually get after a long day with Heidi.

The Hipseat is also fully machine washable in case of leaky nappies or long sweaty walks, and I’ve been really impressed by its durability. There’s no puckering or twisting inside the band so it’s retained its shape superbly. It’s also surprisingly comfy to wear allowing me to walk considerably longer with Heidi. My Fitbit is testament to this, and I’ve been regularly managing those all-important 10,000 steps a day.

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I picked a neutral purple shade, but there’s 7 different colourways in total. Most of the colours are priced at £39.95 with free standard delivery, however the ditsy Liberty print and coffee coloured seat are currently on sale at £25.00. If you compare this to slings, that’s some 50% below the average RRP (even more so for the hipseats priced at £25.00). For something that works so perfectly and allows you better freedom of movement with your child, it’s a no-brainer.

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Buy yours direct from Hippychick

Find out more

Web: www.hippychick.com / FB: @Hippychick / Twitter: @hippychick_com YouTube: @HippychickLtd


Television will never be the same again…

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I can’t speak for every parent but I can most definitely say that having a baby has had an almighty effect on my attention span and ability to watch the telly.

It has simply become so much harder now I have a writhing, commando-crawling, squeaking baby boy. There’s definitely only so much you can hear above a screaming and chatty baby. There’s also the universal baby-obsession with attempting to eat the remote control and the (albeit) genius ability to screw up your sound and picture settings with their sole tooth. If you forget to quickly shove the control behind a sofa cushion they are guaranteed to flick the channel to Adult TV in the middle of the interviewing of a crucial suspect on Broadchurch.

A typical day in our house will usually start with BBC News. Dexter will sit in silence throughout the mundane news items like an interview with Amanda Holden about the total lack of talent in the UK, then decide to kick off when something actually newsworthy comes on. If I dare adjust the volume on the television, the “Mama, Mama, Mama’s” get louder in protest. He extends the same courtesy to Question Time so I have to cryptically work out what’s up for debate by lip-reading the panels responses.

Dexter is usually then entreated to a quick half hour of Mr Tumble whilst he flings toast around the living room. I’ll use the opportunity to check my emails, prepare his bottles, make the beds… stick my face in boiling water… anything to get out of listening to the incessant babbling of excited children who have just learnt to sign some inanimate object.

During his nap I might catch up on last night’s One Born Every Minute, 24 Hours in A&E or Homelands - something ‘adult’ to remind me that I’m 30-years-old and haven’t reverted to a 11-month-old by osmosis. I don’t get an opportunity to watch these in the evenings anymore as my attention span becomes equal to one half of Jedward when Dexter finally goes to bed.

These programmes tend to affect me more now I’m a mum myself. One Born used to be watched behind a sofa cushion with Craig and I both vowing to beg the doctor for a C-section when our time comes. We’d mock the clueless daddy’s, admonish the mums-to-be for not shaving their armpits, and shake our heads at the jobless teenagers who joyfully tell a 2 million+ audience they “forgot to take the pill”. Now I’m a snot-soaked mess after every episode and remembering my own messy and life-changing experience.

University Challenge is another favourite in our house. The catty comments used to start before the the first terrifying question left Paxman’s cannon-like mouth - “You’d think he brush his hair?!”… “Craig, we’ve got a smiler! His lip definitely moved!”… “His parents must have chained him to a desk”… We’d work out which team had the most ‘normal’ looking contestants based upon based the length of their hair, choice of garish shirt, or any little stumbles when they make during their intro’s. We’d console ourselves that any lack of knowledge we have about quadratic equations, the periodic table, and South-American native marsupials is absolutely fine - we spent our university days learning about Life and flush mechanisms on toilets in the student union. We prioritized beer over bread during our student days and are all the more rounded for it!

Now, we sit in amazement when they answer questions that might aswell be asked in Mandarin. I’m far more sympathetic when Paxman offers scathing criticism in response to a blatant guess. When they dare interrupt Monotone Paxman with an early answer we’ve got our fingers crossed that divine intervention has led to them getting it right. That could be our son in few years time!

You can’t even get over emotional and scream profanities during an England match anymore. Even though Dexter hasn’t even learnt what ‘mummy’ and ‘daddy’ means yet and is yet to say anything remotely decipherable, we’re paranoid about his first word being something our own parents would disapprove of. If I let slip an expletive when the ever-delightful Kerry Katona informs me that Cash Lady is the answer to our spiralling debt problem Dexter has a paddy like I’ve just threatened to decapitate his sock monkey.

Add to the mix that Craig and I now have a 10pm curfew to make sure we’re putting in enough quality time to add another Mills baby to the household - the television might aswell be a dusty mirror in Miss Haversham’s bedroom!

Anyone else struggle to have a meaningful relationship with their television now they’re parents?

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